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PRIVACY
Enterprise

North East business life: charity, community and award events in the region

This week's round-up features Lycetts, Greggs, Ward Hadaway, Sunderland Software City and North Tyneside Business Forum

The Greggs Foundation celebrates the opening of its 800th Breakfast Club at Baildon Glen Primary School, with Greggs chief executive officer, Roisin Currie (back row, third from the left) and chief financial officer, Richard Hutton, (back row, centre).(Image: Anthony Devlin/PinPep)

Greggs CEO Roisin Currie helped The Greggs Foundation to mark the opening of its 800th Breakfast Club last week. The milestone Breakfast Club has opened its doors at Baildon Glen Primary School, in Shipley, part of Exceed Academies Trust, and will offer 168 children a free breakfast to help pupils prepare for the school day ahead. Breakfast options include toast, fruit and yoghurt and will ensure no child experiences hunger as a barrier to learning in the classroom.

As well as providing a nutritious morning meal, the daily breakfast club offers time for children to chat and engage with school staff before their classes begin. With the cost-of-living crisis continuing to impact children and families throughout the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, the Greggs Foundation offers all schools in its breakfast club network access to a hardship fund. The fund helps those in financial crisis with support for food, clothing and energy vouchers, as well as essential home appliances. Launched in 1999, the Greggs Foundation’s Breakfast Club programme has grown to serve wholesome, free breakfasts to around 49,500 children every school day.

Ms Currie added: “No child should ever start their day without breakfast, which is why we pledged to open 1,000 Breakfast Clubs by 2025. It’s an honour to have opened our 800th Club in Shipley this morning, and to meet the pupils who will benefit from it. Our Breakfast Club programme has been running for over 20 years, and we look forward to continuing to support our local communities and meeting our goal to help provide breakfast to 70,000 children every day by the end of 2025.”

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Sunderland Software City (SSC) is supporting Bill Quay Primary School’s VEX Robotics Team(Image: Sunderland Software City)

Tech sector support organisation Sunderland Software City (SSC) has issued a call to the region’s digital technology community to help a Gateshead school realise its dreams of international robotics excellence. Bill Quay Primary School’s VEX Robotics Team is seeking sponsorship to fund hopes of competing at the forthcoming VEX Robotics World Championships, set to take place in Texas next month. VEX Robotics is an international robot-building programme that provides children with exciting, open-ended robotics challenges that enhance their science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) skills through hands-on, student-centred learning.

During this academic year, Bill Quay pupils have taken part in numerous VEX IQ competitions throughout the North East which led to them competing in the national finals in Telford in March where they qualified to compete in the world championships. They approached SSC to help fund their journey and tap into the region’s tech community for support.

Jamie Hardesty, head of communications and stakeholder engagement at SSC, said: “What pupils at Bill Quay have achieved so far in their robotics journey is incredible. We are determined to help them showcase their talents on the international stage and get them to Texas. It’s a privilege to sponsor them and we hope other North East technology organisations can follow suit and lend their support too.”

Bill Quay’s ICT Lead Gina Dye added: “We are in shock as to how well our pupils have done because this competition and opportunity is massive. We are one of only four º£½ÇÊÓÆµ schools aiming to get to Texas and I can’t stress enough how much the children deserve this. They are in my classroom every lunchtime building and problem-solving, it really is inspiring.”